How Biden can restore US place in the world

There is so much to celebrate with the new year. The arrival of safe, effective coronavirus disease vaccines means that there is light at the end of the pandemic tunnel (though the next few months will be horrific). Equally important, US President Donald Trump will soon be replaced by Joe Biden.

But we should harbor no illusions about what Biden will face in office. There will be deep scars left from the Trump presidency and from a pandemic that the outgoing administration did so little to fight. The economic trauma will not heal overnight and, without comprehensive assistance at this critical time of need — including support for cash-strapped state and local governments — the pain will be prolonged.

America’s long-term allies will, of course, welcome the return of a world where the US stands up for democracy and human rights, and cooperates internationally to address global problems like pandemics and climate change. But, again, it would be foolish to pretend that the world has not changed fundamentally. The US has, after all, shown itself to be an untrustworthy ally.

The world needs more than Trump’s narrow transactional approach; so does the US. The only way forward is through true multilateralism, in which American exceptionalism is genuinely subordinated to common interests and values, international institutions, and a form of rule of law from which the US is not exempt. This would represent a major shift for the US, from a position of longstanding hegemony to one built on partnerships.

Such an approach would not be unprecedented. After the Second World War, the US found that ceding some influence to the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund was in its interests. The problem is that America didn’t go far enough. While John Maynard Keynes wisely called for the creation of a global currency — an idea later manifested in the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) — the US demanded veto power at the IMF and didn’t vest the organization with as much power as it should have.

In any case, much of what Biden will be able to do in office depends on the outcomes of Tuesday’s runoff elections for Georgia’s two US Senate seats. But even without a willing partner in the Senate, the president has enormous sway over international affairs. There is plenty that Biden will be able to do on his own, starting immediately.

One obvious priority will be the post-pandemic recovery, which will not be strong anywhere until it is strong everywhere. We cannot count on China to play as pronounced a role in driving global demand this time around as it did in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis. Moreover, developing and emerging economies lack the resources for the massive stimulus programs that the US and Europe have provided for their economies. What is needed, as IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva has pointed out, is a massive issuance of SDRs. Some $500 billion of this global “money” could be issued overnight if only the US secretary of the treasury would approve.

The international rule of law is as important to the US’s own prosperity as it is to the functioning of the global economy. 

Joseph E. Stiglitz

Whereas the Trump administration has been blocking an SDR issuance, Biden could give it the green light, while also endorsing existing congressional proposals to expand the size of the issuance substantially. The US could then join the other wealthy countries that have already agreed to donate or lend their allocation to countries in need.

The Biden administration can also help lead the push for sovereign debt restructuring. Several developing countries and emerging markets are already facing debt crises, and many more may soon follow. If there was ever a time when the US had an interest in global debt restructuring, it is now.

For the past four years, the Trump administration has denied basic science and flouted the rule of law. Restoring Enlightenment norms is thus another top priority. The international rule of law, no less than science, is as important to the US’ own prosperity as it is to the functioning of the global economy.

On trade, the World Trade Organization (WTO) offers a foundation upon which to rebuild. As of now, the WTO order is shaped too much by power politics and neoliberal ideology; but that can change. There is a growing consensus in support of Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala’s candidacy to be the WTO’s next director-general, anappointment held up only by the Trump administration.

No trade system can function without a method of adjudicating disputes. By refusing to approve any new judges to the WTO’s dispute settlement mechanism to succeed those whose terms have ended, the Trump administration has left the institution inquorate and paralyzed. Nonetheless, the outgoing president has unwittingly opened the door for improving US trade policy.

For example, the Trump administration’s renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement with Mexico and Canada largely did away with the investment provisions that had become among the most noxious aspects of international economic relations. And now, Trump’s trade representative, Robert Lighthizer, is using the time he has left in office to call for “anti-dumping” sanctions against countries that give their companies an advantage by ignoring global environmental standards. There now seem to be ample grounds for a new bipartisan consensus on trade.

Most of the actions I have described do not require congressional action and can be carried out in Biden’s first days in office. Pursuing them would go a long way toward reaffirming America’s commitment to multilateralism and putting the past four years behind us.

  • Joseph E. Stiglitz

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